Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock, which manages $14 trillion in assets, released his 2026 annual shareholder letter on March 23. In the letter, he warned that AI is creating a "K-shaped outcome," with leading companies accelerating away from everyone else. He wrote, "When market capitalization climbs while ownership remains narrow, prosperity can feel increasingly distant."
This is not an empty statement. Over the past 20 years, the S&P 500 has increased 8-fold. But according to the Federal Reserve's 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), the distribution of this 8-fold growth has been extremely concentrated.
The wealthiest 1% of U.S. households captured 54% of all stock market wealth, a figure that was 40% 20 years ago. The next 2-10% captured 39%. The bottom 90% of Americans collectively hold only 7% of stocks, and the bottom 50% hold just 1%. According to Gallup data, 87% of households with an annual income over $100,000 own stocks, compared to only 28% of those with incomes under $50,000.
Fink used a precise analogy in his letter. "Since 1989, one dollar invested in the U.S. stock market has appreciated more than 15 times one dollar tied to the median wage." In other words, the gap between those with money to invest and those relying solely on wages has widened 15-fold over 35 years. He worries that AI will "repeat this pattern on a larger scale, concentrating wealth in the companies and investors capable of capturing it."
This diagnosis is accurate. The prescription that follows is the part of the letter that is truly worth dissecting.
Fink cited a bipartisan proposal by Senators Bill Cassidy and Tim Kaine. The content involves the federal government borrowing $1.5 trillion over 5 years to inject into an investment fund independent of the existing social security system. This fund would buy stocks, private equity, and other assets, lock them in for 75 years, and use the returns to supplement the social security shortfall. The U.S. Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted by 2033, at which point beneficiaries would receive only 83% of promised benefits.
Compare the numbers. The U.S. Social Security Trust Fund is about $2.8 trillion; the Cassidy-Kaine proposal would inject $1.5 trillion. BlackRock's assets under management are $14 trillion, 5 times the size of the Social Security fund. If the government really establishes a $1.5 trillion investment fund, who will manage it? Fink didn't say it directly, but BlackRock is the world's largest asset manager.
Even more intriguing is the second prescription Fink offers. He positions tokenization as being "roughly equivalent to the internet in 1996" and proposes establishing "a regulated digital wallet" that would allow ordinary investors to use it to hold ETFs, bonds, stablecoins, and infrastructure shares. This would lower the barrier to investment and allow more people to participate in the market.
This vision corresponds perfectly to BlackRock's biggest business bets over the past two years. BlackRock's BUIDL fund (an on-chain tokenized U.S. Treasury fund) surpassed $1 billion in AUM in March 2025, peaking at nearly $2.9 billion mid-year, capturing over 40% of the tokenized Treasury market. In February 2026, BUIDL launched on Uniswap, allowing whitelisted investors to trade with stablecoins 24/7. According to CCN, BUIDL has become one of the world's largest tokenized cash products.
Fink's declaration of interest and policy recommendations align perfectly. He calls for more people to enter the investment market through tokenization, and BlackRock's flagship tokenized product is already waiting to onboard clients. He proposes the government establish a large investment fund, and BlackRock is the most qualified institution to manage that money. This is not an accusation that he is lying; it is pointing out a structural fact. When the CEO of the world's largest asset manager calls for expanded investment access, he is simultaneously calling for an expansion of his own client base.
On the same day, another signal came from Wall Street.
According to Bloomberg, JPMorgan Chase launched a CDS (credit default swap) basket in February 2026 targeting the five hyperscale companies (Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Oracle), with a trading unit of $25 million. These five companies issued approximately $121 billion in bonds in 2025, 4.3 times the average annual issuance of $28 billion from 2020-2024. According to Bank of America forecasts, issuance will further climb to $175 billion in 2026.
When Wall Street starts designing hedging tools for AI infrastructure debt, it indicates that institutional investors are already preparing for a potential bubble burst. Fink says AI will exacerbate inequality; JPMorgan says AI's debt risk is already significant enough to warrant selling insurance. Both signals point to the same fact. The AI boom is creating enormous wealth, but the distribution of this wealth and its risk exposure are repeating the pattern of the previous cycle in a familiar way.
Fink manages $14 trillion. His diagnosis of inequality is accurate. But the medicine he prescribes happens to be his own product.









